Laurence Sterne
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
Laurence Sterne , 1713-68, English author, b. Ireland. Educated at Cambridge, he entered the Anglican church and was given the living of Sutton-in-the-Forest, Yorkshire, in 1738, where he remained until 1759. He came to London the following year and was a great social success. Unhappily married, he was involved with various women during his lifetime, most notably Mrs. Eliza Draper, for whom he wrote the Journal to Eliza (1767). He led a somewhat dissolute life and much of the time was plagued by ill health, dying finally of tuberculosis. In 1760 the first volume of his masterpiece Tristram Shandy appeared. Although it was denounced on moral and literary grounds by Dr. Johnson, Horace Walpole, and others, the book was a popular success and eight subsequent volumes followed (1761-67). As a result of his travels to the Continent (1762-66) he wrote, but left unfinished, A Sentimental Journey (1768). He also published in his lifetime several volumes of sermons. One of the most entertaining and original literary works in English, Tristram Shandy is, in a sense, a parody of a novel. It is a hodgepodge of character sketches, blank pages, dramatic action, transposed chapters, and various digressions. Sterne constantly obtrudes himself into the novel and is by turns witty, satiric, sentimental, knowledgeable, and obscene. Beneath this apparent chaos, however, is a structure based on the association of ideas. In Tristram Shandy Sterne enlarged the scope of the novel from the mere recording of external incidents to the depiction of a complex of internal impressions, thoughts, and feelings.
Bibliography: See the Shakespeare Head Press edition of his works (7 vol., 1926-27); his letters (ed. by L. P. Curtis, 1935); his memoirs ed. by D. Grant (1950); biographies by W. L. Cross (3d rev. ed. 1967), W. B. Piper (1965), D. Thomson (1973), and A. H. Cash (2 vol.,1975-86); studies by L. C. Hartley (1966), J. M. Stedmond (1967), J. Traugott, comp. (1968), and Valerie G. Myer (1984).
Author not available, STERNE, LAURENCE.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Sermons on sermonizing: the pulpit rhetoric of Swift and Sterne. (Jonathan Swift, Laurence Sterne)
Philological Quarterly; 9/22/1997; Fanning, Christopher; 10037 words;
Jonathan Swift and Laurence Sterne have frequently been compared ... Christianity. In his major study, Laurence Sterne as Satirist: A Reading of Tristram ... Florida Edition of the Works of Laurence Sterne. [U. of Florida Press, 1996 ...
|
|
Laurence Sterne.(Critical Essay)
New Criterion; 1/1/2002; Allen, Brooke; 4840 words;
Laurence Sterne's masterpiece, Tristram Shandy, is seldom ... frequently ironic contexts. Thus the Laurence Sterne inherited by the nineteenth century ... penurious young man at that time, and Laurence Sterne seems never to have questioned the decision ...
|
|
All too human; Literary biography; Laurence Sterne.(Books and Arts)(Review)
The Economist (US); 4/14/2001; 621 words;
LAURENCE STERNE: A LIFE. AS IAN CAMPBELL ROSS remarks ... particular, Arthur H. Cash's two volumes, Laurence Sterne: The Early and Middle Years (1975) and Laurence Sterne: The Later Years (1986) must have seemed ...
|
|
Sterne, Descartes, and the music in 'Tristram Shandy.' (Laurence Sterne's 'The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy' a satire of Rene Descartes' 'Compendium Musicae')
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900; 6/22/1998; Vlock, Deborah M.; 8369 words;
... omission from the corpus of Laurence Sterne criticism given the novel's ... found is in William Freedman, Laurence Sterne and the Origins of the Musical ... interest in his article Haydn, Laurence Sterne, and the Origins of Musical ...
|
|
Laurence Sterne and the ethics of sexual difference: chiasmic narration and double desire.
Christianity and Literature; 3/22/2002; Kraft, Elizabeth; 10422 words;
... individual) feeling heart. (1) Laurence Sterne poses a special problem in terms ... to biblical narratology, see Laurence Sterne Revisited 65-79. (13) In fact ... 1999): 7-19. Cash, Arthur H. Laurence Sterne: The Early and Middle Years ...
|
|
Monday Book: The vicar who wrote to become famous; Laurence Sterne: a life by Ian Campbell Ross (Oxford University Press, pounds 25).(Comment)
The Independent (London, England); 4/23/2001; King, Steve; 629 words;
LAURENCE STERNE was a late bloomer. He was 48 when the ... 1759. The book was an instant smash and Sterne loved every minute of the fame that it ... who languished in the provinces while Sterne Shandied it in the capital, gloating over ...
|
|
Monday Book: The vicar who wrote to become famous Laurence Sterne: a life by Ian Campbell Ross (Oxford University Press, pounds 25)
The Independent - London; 4/23/2001; Steve King; 631 words;
LAURENCE STERNE was a late bloomer. He was 48 when the ... 1759. The book was an instant smash and Sterne loved every minute of the fame that it ... who languished in the provinces while Sterne "Shandied it" in the capital, gloating ...
|
|
Inexpressible sadness: Sterne's Sermons and the moral inadequacies of politeness in Tristram Shandy.(Laurence Sterne's The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman)(Critical essay)
Christianity and Literature; 6/22/2006; Hartling, Shannon; 6287 words;
... not want to hear Le Fever's story; Walter retreats into isolation and philosophy at the news of the death of his son Bobby; Tristram flies across France in an attempt to outpace ... hegemony of classical order. It is through the evocation of this grotesque body that Sterne mounts a critique of the dangers of ...
|
|
By Keith Brace: Books: More to Sterne than double entendres and sniggering; Laurence Sterne - A Life. By Ian Campbell Ross (Oxford University Press, pounds 25). By Keith Brace.
The Birmingham Post (England); 5/12/2001; 444 words;
... novelist and all-out eccentric, Laurence Sterne (1713-1768), is the arch-sniggerer ... William Wycherly. There was more to Sterne than sniggering, as there was to ... immensely influential technique in Sterne's two novels, Tristram Shandy and ...
|
|
Laurence Sterne and the visual imagination.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 5/1/2007; 116 words;
075465673X Laurence Sterne and the visual imagination. Gerard ... comprehensive study of the illustrations of Sterne's work, Gerard (English, Auburn U.) explores the ability of Sterne's text to inspire the visual imagination ... explains that the profuse illustrations in Sterne's fiction reflect ...
|
|
Yorick's congregation; the Church of England in the time of Laurence Sterne.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 5/1/2007; 110 words;
... the Church of England in the time of Laurence Sterne. Bowden, Martha F. Univ. of Delaware ... Kennesaw State U.), and lead readers of Sterne's (1713-68) Tristam Shandy to miss ... University Presses. ([c]20072005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR)
|
|
A good idea from... Laurence Sterne
The Independent - London; 12/5/1999; Alain de Botton; 336 words;
... of the great British novelist, Laurence Sterne (1713- 1768), who in his Tristram ... than expounding on it at length, Laurence Sterne - in one of the most original ... rick's life and death than any words Sterne might have found. The pages are ...
|
|
TITLE DEED HOW DID CELEBRATED BOOKS GET THEIR NAMES? Laurence Sterne's The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy
The Sunday Telegraph London; 10/16/2005; GARY DEXTER; 151 words;
... name Tristram Shandy, does, however, reveal a secret intention. Sterne's greatest influence was the sentimental, satiric, circumlocutory ... and since "shandy'' is a Yorkshire dialect word for crazy (Sterne was a Yorkshire priest), the final translation can only be ...
|
|
Sterne's sentimental Yorick as male hysteric.
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900; 6/22/1996; Gould, Rebecca; 5013 words;
In A Sentimental Journey by Laurence Sterne, the narrator protagonist Yorick ... Bernheimer and Kahane, p. 151. 9 Laurence Sterne, A Sentimental Journey through ... Univ. Press, 1968), p. 71. 10 Sterne, p. 72. 11 Mullan, p. 210, citing ...
|
|
Thomas Keymer, Sterne, the Moderns, and The Novel.(Book Review)
Irish University Review: a journal of Irish Studies; 9/22/2003; Regan, Shaun; 2154 words;
Thomas Keymer, Sterne, the Moderns, and The ... Marcus Walsh, editor, Laurence Sterne. London: Longman, 2002 ... especially typical of Sterne's novel. The weaknesses ... Shandyish world of Sterne studies, one feels ... short of the end of Sterne's novel-writing career ... historicist work on ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy: A Casebook.(Brief article)(Book review)
Contemporary Review; 6/22/2007; 189 words;
|
Sterne, the Moderns, and the Novel.(Scepticism and Literature: An Essay on Pope, Hume, Sterne, and Johnson)(Book Review)
The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2005; Zomchick, John P.; 1337 words;
|
Tristram Shandy.(Brief Article)(Young Adult Review)(Audiobook Review)
Kliatt; 9/1/2005; Levitov, Francine; 248 words;
|
Narrative apostrophe: reading, rhetoric, resistance in Michel Butor's 'La modification' and Julio Cortazar's "Graffiti." (Second-Person Narrative)
Style; 9/22/1994; Kacandes, Irene; 10490 words;
|
Real life and fantasy mix on film: in 'Tristram Shandy,' egos clash; 'Bubble' tells a working-class tale; 'Nanny MePhee' works her magic.(MOVIES)(Movie Review)
National Catholic Reporter; 2/17/2006; Cunneen, Joseph; 885 words;
|
Tristram Shandy: a cock and bull story.(Movie review)(Brief article)
Interview; 11/1/2005; Nayman, Adam; 117 words;
|
Recent Work in Critical Theory [*].(Bibliography)
Style; 12/22/1999; Baker, William Womack, Kenneth; 51551 words;
|
The epistolary passions of sympathy: feeling letters in Persuasion and Burney's The Wanderer.(AGM 2005: Milwaukee)
Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal; 1/1/2005; Nagle, Christopher; 4829 words;
|
Transports of the imagination: some relations between globalization and literature.
Arena Journal; 1/1/2002; During, Simon; 7488 words;
|
Recent work in critical theory.(Bibliography)
Style; 12/22/1997; Baker, William Womack, Kenneth Martin, Rebecca; 59685 words;
|
|
|